(Minghui.org) "Hello! I see you're busy, so I've jotted down this note. Please help me withdraw from the Youth League and the Young Pioneers [two organizations affiliated with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)].

"I filled out an application to join the Party, but I did not officially join it. That application is null and void! Thank you!

"My name is ___. I hope I have a chance to meet you again."

Falun Gong practitioner Ms. Dai found this note under the pad she was sitting on when she finished doing the sitting meditation one morning this past August at Mount Faber, a popular tourist destination in Singapore.

A Chinese tourist put it there because he did not wish to disturb her.

A quit-the-CCP request received at Mount Faber tourist attraction in Singapore

A similar note was found inside a brochure handed to Ms. Cao last year. A Chinese tourist put it inside after reading the brochure.

A Chinese tourist left a quit-the-CCP note in a practitioner's brochure. It said, "I quit the Party, the Youth League, and the Young Pioneers. Name [covered for security reasons], 2013, Singapore."

Mount Faber is one of Singapore's oldest hilltop parks. It's a good place to get a panoramic view of the central business district. Large numbers of tourists from China and around the world visit this scenic spot every day.

Ms. Dai and other practitioners go there every morning to do the Falun Gong exercises and hand out informational materials. They hope to share the beauty of this ancient Chinese cultivation practice with the tourists and raise awareness about the persecution in China.

Background:

The publication of the editorial series Nine Commentaries on the Communist Party by the Epoch Times in 2004 triggered a massive movement to quit the CCP.

More than 178 million people have registered their resignations from the CCPorganizations on the Epoch Times' “Tuidang” (Quit-the-CCP) website. About 90,000 people quit every day, according to Yi Rong, president of the GlobalService Center for Quitting the CCP.

Quitting the CCP has become a major objective for many Chinese traveling abroad.